What was implied by mercantilism, which grew with the transatlantic trade route?(1 point)

Responses

It was implied that Africans were inferior to Europeans.
It was implied that Africans were inferior to Europeans.

It was implied that nationalism was an important idea.
It was implied that nationalism was an important idea.

It was implied that the colonists were inferior to their mother country.
It was implied that the colonists were inferior to their mother country.

It was implied that an African diaspora would occur.
It was implied that an African diaspora would occur.

None of the given responses imply or are directly related to mercantilism or the transatlantic trade route. Mercantilism was an economic system that emphasized the accumulation of wealth through trade and the establishment of colonies to secure resources and markets. The transatlantic trade route, on the other hand, refers to the trading of goods, including slaves, between Europe, Africa, and the Americas. The implications of mercantilism and the transatlantic trade route were primarily economic and political, rather than social or racial.

Mercantilism, which grew with the transatlantic trade route, implied several ideas:

1. Africans were considered inferior to Europeans.
2. Nationalism was seen as an important concept.
3. The colonists were considered inferior to their mother country.
4. It was implied that there would be an African diaspora, or dispersal of Africans across different regions.